
The UN condemned continued incidents of summary executions, arbitrary killings, abductions, sexual violence, arbitrary detentions, looting and the destruction of homes.
The Syrian regime needs to take more steps to ensure an end to the violence targeting minority groups in Syria, including violent offences against the Druze community, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights insisted on Friday ahead of the anniversary of the fall of the Assad regime.
Claiming the regime has taken “encouraging steps towards addressing past violations,” including trials of those alleged to have been involved in the massacres in Sweida and the Druze villages, spokespeople for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Thameen Al-Kheethan noted that “distressing accounts” of violence persist.
While the regime has established national commissions for transitional justice and missing persons and investigatory bodies into the massacres, the UN condemned continued incidents of summary executions, arbitrary killings, abductions, sexual violence, arbitrary detentions, looting, destruction of homes, forced evictions, and confiscation of houses, land and property and the limitation of free expression.
“Hundreds were killed since the fall of the former regime, including from gun, knife, and stone attacks, and as a result of shelling, and hand grenades,” Thameen said. “These killings were carried out by security forces of the interim authorities, groups affiliated with them, elements associated with the former government, local armed groups and unidentified armed individuals.”
Themeen acknowledged that former armed groups were rapidly integrated into the new security forces “without proper human rights-based vetting” and that this step was an essential component in ensuring no further violations are committed.
Syria's genocide against Druze
Israeli Druze have repeatedly conveyed to The Jerusalem Post, including in a recent visit to the command center in northern Israel, that regime authorities have orchestrated attacks against their Syrian relatives.
Citing statements from prisoners detained during the attacks on Syrian villages, footage of official cars being used, and Syria’s own admission that a number of security officials were involved in the attacks on Sweida and other villages in southern Syria, the Israeli Druze claimed the Sharaa regime was responsible for the violence.
Sources have also told The Post that Druze are forced to smuggle life-saving medication into Sweida as the regime has prevented resources from entering the villages - including medical devices which were destroyed during the initial massacres.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
10 Demonstrated Tips to Dominate Video Altering on Your Cell phone in 2023 - 2
Toyota Just Electrified a Pickup Legend, but It Won’t Be Cheap - 3
What loving-kindness meditation is and how to practice it in the new year - 4
Dear Santa: I want Botox. Why cosmetic procedures are topping holiday wish lists. - 5
Coffee Prices Finish Higher on Brazil Cop Concerns
The Job of a Migration Legal advisor: How They Can Help You
James Webb Space Telescope watches our Milky Way galaxy's monster black hole fire out a flare
Picking the Right Air Purifier for Your Home
How 2025 became the year of comet: The rise of interstellar 3I/ATLAS, an icy Lemmon and a cosmic SWAN
Figure out How to Forestall Tooth Staining
Yemen's Houthis ready to join Iran war if needed, raising new shipping risk
Portugal among EU countries with the most people working close to 50 hours a week
IDF, police arrest eleven for criminal, terror-related activity over weekend
Iranian rockets hit Tel Aviv area, injuring six













